Stamp of the Day

Historical Figures & Events

The Graf Zeppelin Takes Us on a Trip Past Two Milestones

The Graf Zeppelin hydrogen powered rigid airship pictured on today’s #stampoftheday takes us on a journey past two aviation-related milestones, both from the 1930s. On June 23, 1931, Wiley Post, a famous aviator and his navigator Harold Getty, took off from Roosevelt Field to begin a record-setting 8-day around-the-world flight (with stops in Harbour Grace, […]

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Petty Politics, Shameful Omissions, and Noble Goals–All in A Stamp Showing the Polish Flag

A stamp featuring the Polish flag whose release event featured a notable omission, petty politics, and an unusual (for the times) privatization of a key government service, is today’s #stampoftheday. Issued on June 22, 1943, the stamp is the first in a series of 5-cent stamps that honored each of the 12 European countries occupied

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Was the SS Savannah the First Steamship to Cross the Atlantic?

A cautionary 19th century tale about the nature and pace of technological improvements is conveyed by today’s #stampoftheday, a 1944 stamp commemorating the voyage of the SS Savannah, which, on June 19, 1815, (sort of) became the first steamship to cross the Atlantic. The ship was originally designed to only be a sail-powered packet that

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Frederick Douglass Keeps Teaching Us About Emancipation, Lincoln, and Race Relations

For at least two reasons, it seems appropriate that my father’s collection lacks the stamp I want to highlight as the #stampoftheday on Juneteenth, which marks the fact that the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed all slaves in the Confederacy was announced in Galveston, Texas, the last holdout of the rebel forces. With that announcement, slavery

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Hopefully the COVID Vaccine Won’t Take as Long as the Polio Vaccine

A multi-year effort to find a vaccine and treatment for a much-feared disease is the subject of today’s #stampoftheday, which was issued on June 15, 1957. The disease was polio, a virus that paralyzes muscles and destroys nerve cells that was common in the US during the first half of the 20th century. The first

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Oklahoma: Where Many Oddities Come “Sweepin’ Down the Plain”

Oklahoma, “where the wind comes sweepin’ down the plain” (and where many strange and unsettling things also have happened), takes center stage as today’s #stampoftheday, a 3-cent stamp, issued on June 14, 1957, to mark the 50th anniversary of Oklahoma becoming the nation’s 46th state. Issued in conjunction with Oklahoma’s Semi-Centennial Exposition, which ran from

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George Mason Gave Us Both the Bill of Rights and the Electoral College

An obscure, slaveholding plantation owner who played a major role in making the Bill of Rights part of the Constitution and in the electoral system that produced a president who has been working to undermine those rights gets the spotlight for today’s #stampoftheday. Issued on June 13, 1958, the 3-cent stamp features Gunston Hall, the

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